In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the racist people of the town are the antagonists. In part one of the novel, Scout and her family get ridiculed for Atticus taking on a case to defend a man of another race. Scout hears from many townspeople, both children and adults, that Atticus is unethical for defending a black person as well has he defends a white person. The prejudice townspeople are opposing Scout by ridiculing her father and the beliefs of Scout's family. Cecil Jones, a girl that attends school with Scout, offends the narrator by telling her, "My folks said your daddy was a disgrace an' that [Tom Robinson] oughta hang from the water tank." (78) Comments such as these prove to the reader that Cecil Jones is opposing the morals …show more content…
Cecil Jacobs and Francis are prime examples of the attitude and perspective of the antagonists. The antagonists of the story make Scout think about what Atticus is doing for Tom Robinson. Since Atticus is the protagonist's father, she defends him first, before thinking truly about the words one has spoken to her. Scout has developed a lot of the same ideals as her father, as most children do, and this is why she had not previously questioned her father's actions to defend Tom Robinson. After hearing the townspeople, Scout begins to wonder why her father would do this, yet most others in Maycomb would not. She tells him, "Atticus you must be wrong," and then, "Well, most folks think they're right and you're wrong." (56) She questions him at the start, and later begins to accept what he is doing. At this age, it is a time where Scout is beginning to make her own opinions with the help of all of the people around her, and she must choose which sides of a story she agrees